Freedom in One Lesson is an attempt to assemble an extensive collection of Leonard Read’s best, most powerful sustained arguments on behalf of liberty. Leonard Read’s goal was to plant the seeds of liberty, so society and individuals could blossom to their fullest potential.
April 2025
US Navy loses $60 million fighter jet after it fell off aircraft carrier. This brings the total cost of lost aircraft in Yemen up to $270 million since Trump took over.
Higher education has become unaffordable and its curriculums hopelessly politicized. We should remember that all of this is a result of programs developed more than a half-century ago to make higher education more accessible.
The Liberal Party, led by new Prime Minister Mark Carney, is projected to form a minority government in a dramatic political comeback, defeating the Conservative Party, led by Pierre Poilievre.
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The sugar tax currently applied to fizzy drinks could soon be extended to milkshakes and similar products under new government proposals revealed on Monday.
The Treasury launched a consultation on plans to remove the exemption for dairy-based drinks—and their non-dairy alternatives such as oat and rice milk—bringing them under the scope of the soft drinks industry levy (SDIL). The government is also considering tightening the sugar threshold that triggers the levy, lowering it from 5g to 4g per 100ml.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves first indicated last year that the government would consider broadening the scope of the levy. The Treasury has now confirmed its intention to move ahead with the changes, citing health concerns over the high sugar content of many milk-based drinks.
According to government analysis, about 203 pre-packed milk-based drinks currently on the market—accounting for 93 per cent of the category’s sales—could be affected unless manufacturers reduce their sugar levels.
The SDIL was introduced in 2018 by the Conservative government as part of a broader anti-obesity drive. Milk-based drinks were originally exempted due to concerns over the importance of calcium intake, particularly for children. However, the Treasury now says that such drinks contribute only 3.5 per cent of young people’s calcium intake, suggesting that the potential health benefits of their consumption are outweighed by the risks posed by excess sugar.
“By bringing milk-based drinks and milk substitute drinks into the SDIL, the government would introduce a tax incentive for manufacturers to build on existing progress and further reduce sugar in their recipes,” a Treasury spokesperson said.
Following the introduction of the SDIL, 89 per cent of fizzy drinks sold in the UK were reformulated to avoid the tax, significantly reducing their sugar content.
However, the proposal has drawn criticism from some quarters. Christopher Snowdon, head of lifestyle economics at the free-market thinktank the Institute of Economic Affairs, said: “The sugar tax has been such a dramatic failure that it should be repealed, not expanded. Sugar taxes have never worked anywhere. What happened to Starmer’s promise to not raise taxes on working people?”
The government’s consultation on the proposed changes is open and will run until 21 July, inviting views from industry stakeholders, public health groups and the wider public.
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Milkshakes could face sugar tax under Treasury plans to expand levy
President Trump is preparing to soften the blow of his new car tariffs by introducing measures that would prevent stacking duties and offer partial reimbursements to US carmakers for imported parts.
The car tariffs, which came into effect on April 3 and are set to extend to car parts on May 3, had sparked concern across the automotive industry. However, Trump is expected to announce a reprieve before a visit to Michigan—home to the Detroit Three carmakers and more than 1,000 major suppliers.
Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary, said: “President Trump is building an important partnership with both the domestic automakers and our great American workers. This deal is a major victory for the President’s trade policy by rewarding companies who manufacture domestically, while providing runway to manufacturers who have expressed their commitment to invest in America and expand their domestic manufacturing.”
Under the expected changes, carmakers would be allowed to receive partial reimbursements based on the value of their US car production. The policy would also be applied retroactively, meaning manufacturers could recover some of the charges already incurred since the tariffs were introduced. Additionally, car imports will not be hit with multiple levies, such as overlapping tariffs on steel and aluminium.
Mary Barra, chief executive of General Motors, welcomed the anticipated relief: “We believe the president’s leadership is helping level the playing field for companies like GM and allowing us to invest even more in the US economy,” she said.
The move comes at a critical time for UK car manufacturers. The United States is the second-largest export market for British-made vehicles, accounting for 16.9 per cent of exports in 2024—around 100,000 vehicles—worth £7.6 billion, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).
A recent study by the US International Trade Commission warned that a 25 per cent tariff could slash car imports by nearly 75 per cent, posing a serious threat to the UK’s automotive sector. Some UK carmakers are already feeling the strain: Jaguar Land Rover paused shipments of British-built vehicles to the US for a month as it works to manage the fallout from the new duties.
While Trump’s expected adjustments will ease immediate pressure on American manufacturers, uncertainty remains for international exporters, who continue to watch closely for further developments.
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Trump poised to ease impact of car tariffs with reimbursement plan for US automakers
Britain’s biggest supermarkets are pumping hundreds of millions of pounds into promotional deals as competition in the grocery sector heats up amid ongoing cost of living pressures.
Almost 30 per cent of supermarket spending was on special offers and discounts in the four weeks to 20 April, according to figures from market research group Kantar. The surge in promotional activity equates to £347 million spent on price cuts, many linked to loyalty card schemes.
Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar, said: “Grocers have been offering big price cuts to stay competitive. They’ve invested in price cuts which were the main driver of promotional growth.” At Tesco and Sainsbury’s, nearly 20 per cent of items sold are part of a price match scheme, featuring in almost two-thirds of customer baskets.
The aggressive push on discounts comes as supermarkets grapple with thin profit margins and intensifying competition. Last month, Asda warned of significantly lower profits this year as it pledged to invest more heavily in lower prices—a move that triggered a £4 billion slump in the combined market value of listed rivals Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Marks & Spencer.
Asda has since cut prices on 1,500 products, including popular items like Cathedral City cheddar cheese and Head & Shoulders shampoo. Since January, Asda said it had slashed prices across nearly 10,000 products. Yet despite these efforts, Asda was the only major supermarket to see a decline in sales over the past three months compared with the same period last year.
While promotional activity is increasing, grocery price inflation remains a challenge for shoppers. Inflation rose to 3.8 per cent in the four weeks to 20 April, its highest level in over a year and well above the recent low of 1.4 per cent in October 2024.
The Easter period helped boost overall spending, with supermarket sales up 11 per cent compared with last year’s Easter run-up, despite a 17.4 per cent jump in chocolate confectionery prices. McKevitt noted that chocolate egg volumes still rose slightly by 0.4 per cent year-on-year, and sunny weather also led to a 31 per cent surge in burger sales as shoppers fired up their barbecues.
In terms of market share, Tesco remains the UK’s largest supermarket with 27.8 per cent, followed by Sainsbury’s at 15.3 per cent and Asda at 12.3 per cent. Aldi holds fourth place with an 11 per cent share, having overtaken Morrisons in 2022. Ocado continues to be the fastest-growing grocer, with sales up 11.8 per cent over the past year, although its overall share remains modest at 1.9 per cent.
With inflation still pressuring household budgets and competition intensifying, supermarkets are likely to keep up the battle for shoppers’ loyalty well into the rest of the year.
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UK supermarkets spend hundreds of millions on promotions as grocery price war intensifies
Keir Starmer’s Labour government has been warned that its tough stance on benefits risks costing the UK economy more than £38 billion a year while pushing more people into poverty and increasing pressure on public services.
The anti-poverty charity the Trussell Trust said that, despite Labour’s repeated promises of no return to austerity, attempts to curb welfare spending could have severe economic and human consequences. In a report commissioned from WPI Economics, the charity argued that Britain’s elevated poverty levels are already sapping potential output and damaging the nation’s finances.
The intervention comes as the government prepares to publish its child poverty strategy in June, amid growing unrest among Labour MPs over the £5 billion in benefit cuts announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her spring statement. Ministers are reportedly ruling out scrapping the controversial two-child benefit limit introduced by the Conservatives, a policy campaigners warn could drive child poverty to record highs.
The Trussell Trust’s report highlights that as many as 9.3 million people, including 3 million children, faced hunger and hardship in the financial year ending March 2023. Defined as living more than 25 per cent below the poverty line set by the Social Metrics Commission, these households struggle with day-to-day essentials.
The economic toll is significant. Lower employment rates and weakened productivity among people in deep poverty mean the UK economy is missing out on £38.2 billion in annual output. This, in turn, deprives the Treasury of £18.4 billion in tax revenues and forces £5.3 billion of extra spending on social security support. Additional demands on services such as the NHS, social care and education are estimated to cost the exchequer another £13.7 billion annually.
Helen Barnard, director of policy, research and impact at the Trussell Trust, urged ministers to urgently rethink their welfare policies, particularly cuts to disability benefits and the maintenance of the two-child limit. “Slashing support for disabled people who most need our collective protection from hunger is cruel, irresponsible, and out of touch with what the public wants,” she said. “Turning this tide would have huge benefits, not just to individuals, but for us all.”
The charity argued that abolishing the two-child limit alone would lift 670,000 people—including 470,000 children—out of hardship, reducing costs to the economy and public services by more than £3 billion.
It also called for the introduction of an “essentials guarantee” within universal credit to ensure that basic living costs are met, a measure that could lift more than two million people out of deep poverty.
A spokesperson for the Department for Work and Pensions defended the government’s approach, saying: “We have set out a sweeping package of reforms to health and disability benefits that genuinely supports people back into work and lifts people out of poverty, while putting the welfare system on a more sustainable footing.”
As Labour prepares its next phase of economic reforms, the warning from the Trussell Trust highlights the political and fiscal risks of pursuing further cuts in a country still grappling with the legacy of years of squeezed living standards.
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Labour’s benefit cuts could cost UK economy billions, warns Trussell Trust
When modern progressives claim to support equity, what they really mean is the confiscation of wealth and transferal of private property to politically-favored groups. These policies have a sorry history from Reconstruction and continued through the 20th century communist regimes.